singidunum wrote:I've seen the Director's cut. Three and a half hours, rather long, but I actually quite enjoyed it. The problem was that the "normal" version lacked a few part of the movie that explained a lot, so people mostly didn't like it.

The whole Dune movie was underrated, especially because most of the people expected another version of Star Wars I guess...

ohh, where did you find the directors cut? I may have to find it and do a reviewing of it.

when I say it I was expecting something a bit like the book, but I did not get it.

I love the uniqueness of David Lynch films. I saw Eraserhead first, many times, just loved it.

Loved Blue Velvet, loved Elephant Man, hated Dune. The last one I saw was Lost Highway, which I really loved because I despise L.A. and because I couldn't figure it out. I love a puzzle.

Did you see any of the Twin Peaks television series? Weird-o-rama and such a weekly treat for us Lynch fans. I had a group of friends that got together every week to marvel at it's sheer madness. It also helped to have friends around because it was so creepy! i think there was a movie based on the TV series called Fire walk With me.

A good friend of mine had a video made from a musical concert he made with singer Julee Cruise. Very haunting.

I recently took an Intro to Film course and Lost Highway was the last film we watched for the semester and without a doubt, it was the most f'ed up movie I had ever seen. The teacher didn't even bother explaining it (we watched it for its use of music and sound) and said to Google the hundreds of theories.

Honestly, I never could figure any of them out and would tend to agree with singi. Trying to explain them is like trying to describe a dream- they're just all over the place! I am a visually-oriented person and Lynch's use of tableaux and other design elements on his sets always thrills me. I remember a scene in Twin Peaks where there were three guys all dressed alike and posed the same way in the background of a bar scene for no apparent reason, almost just to see if you'd notice.

Oh, DaveL, I loved the midget! He was in the Julee Cruise video, too, as the narrator. The whole thing was about broken hearts and hearing it come from the small guy seemed to illustrate how small a broken-hearted person feels. I guess that's kind of trite, but Lynch seems to like that sort of corny emotional thing played with a bizarre twist. One of Lynch's pieces from the video, "I'm Hurt Bad", is played on the juke box in the first Twin Peaks episode.

I was a huge fan of Twin peaks but I guess it was just too- well, wierd- for mainstream televsion audiences. I would have loved to see what would have happened if the series had been given a third season. Too bad we will never know.

"Most people just take themselves too damn seriously, which is why they act like damn fools."
- Robert Anton Wilson

I love Twin Peaks--I saw it when it first came out, and I dressed like the Log Lady for Halloween one year. Haven't re-watched it in ages, though.

Eraserhead I didn't like as much, although it does certainly have some memorable images. (Pulsating chicken, anyone?) I love Lost Highway, Mullholland Drive, Blue Velvet, and Wild at Heart. I've never seen Dune, but I'm gonna go see it tomorrow--it's playing at a revival theatre near me.

I agree with what folks have said here--David Lynch films are often as cryptic and mysterious as dreams, and as with many dreams, impossible to interpret. With Lynch's films, I just like to sit back, and enjoy the ride.

I have never let my schooling interfere with my education.
--Mark Twain

I LOVE David Lynch, I wish INLAND EMPIRE was coming to DVD sooner (I missed it when it was showing in a theater near me ).. Blue Velvet is in my top ten favorite films of all time, and The Elephant Man almost made me cry.. I haven't seen Dune, Twin Peaks, and Eraserhead yet though.. Oh and Mulholland Dr. is one of the best movies of this decade.